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Grassland
includes meadows, pastures and amenity areas. Meadows are annually cut
for hay, whereas pastures are grazed. Amenity grassland is closely and
regularly mown in urban areas within public parks, recreation/sports grounds
and private gardens.
There
is a diverse range of grassland types in the Trust's region, stretching
from sea level with saltmarsh, dune
and coastal grassland, up onto some of the highest
hills in Lancashire. They can be wet or dry, acidic, neutral or calcareous,
improved or unimproved. However, nature isn't clear-cut and there can be
a mosaic of several different types in a small area.
Grasslands
are important in their own right with species-rich neutral and calcareous
grassland being represented in the Lancashire
Biodiversity Action Plan. They also support a range of other species
including fungi, nesting birds,
butterflies and many invertebrates.
To many animals the vegetation structure is as important as the plant species
hence a variation in the height is preferable and ideally some areas should
be left tall over the winter.
When
it comes to management, meadows are cut usually for hay and this includes
the traditional wildflower meadows. The best time to cut hay in terms of
nutritional value for animal feed can be June but this is too early for
many plants to have produced seed and for ground-nesting birds to have
finished nesting. Hence for nature conservation, cutting after the majority
of plants have set seed is preferable, which is often September or October.
If you have a garden why not create your own mini wildflower meadow at
home?
Pastures
are grazed by livestock such as cattle and sheep and/or by wild animals
such as rabbits and deer. Sheep can nibble very close to the ground, producing
a lawn effect and eating all the flowers, whereas cattle and horses don't
graze so closely and often plants are given a chance to flower and seed.
| Grassland
type |
Indicator
plants |
Associated
animals |
Where
to see them |
| Acidic |
Heath
bedstraw, mat-grass, wavy hair-grass, sheep's sorrel |
Dotterel,
skylark, ring ouzel |
Pendle
Hill (557m), Boulsworth Hill, Bowland Fells |
| Amenity |
Perennial
rye-grass, daisy, dandelion, greater plantain |
Starling,
house sparrow |
Most
public parks |
| Calcareous |
Meadow
oat-grass, blue moor-grass, salad burnet, thyme, wild marjoram |
Butterflies |
Arnside/Silverdale,
Warton Crag* Leck Fell (661m), Nob End, Salthill* |
| Coastal |
Spring
squill, sea plantain, thrift |
Sea
birds |
Heysham
Head, Silverdale |
| Dune |
Burnet
rose, common milkwort, harebell, wild thyme, Sand sedge, restharrow,
kidney vetch, marram grass |
Skylark,
lizards, butterflies |
Sefton
Coast, Lytham |
| Improved |
Perennial
rye-grass, white clover |
Brown
hare, waterfowl |
Most
rural areas below 300m |
| Marshy |
Rushes,
sedges, meadowsweet, purple moor-grass marsh marigold, valerian |
Breeding
wading birds |
Bowland
Fells, Longworth Clough* |
| Neutral
|
Meadow
foxtail, tufted hair-grass, meadow fescue, meadow crane's-bill, great
burnet, yellow rattle |
Yellow
wagtail, curlew |
Lower
Red Lees Pasture, Mytton Meadows, Meols Meadows |
| Saltmarsh |
Sea
purslane, sea aster, sea-lavendar, sea arrowgrass, sea plantain, cord-grass
|
Wading
birds |
Ribble,
Lune & Wyre Estuaries, Barnaby's Sands & Burrows Marsh* |
* = Wildlife Trust nature reserves |